The sketch featured numerous "SNL" regulars and spoofed the 1990s children's game show "Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego?" It featured a title sequence with "SNL" veteran Kate McKinnon as Kellyanne Conway dressed as Carmen Sandiego.

"She used to be on TV and, like, every single panel," actor Chris Pine, who was hosting "SNL," sang along with cast members in an a cappella group. "One day we woke up and she was no longer there. What could have happened? She's not on any channel."

The sketch then brought out two children and referred to them as "gumshoes" — or amateur detectives — much as the '90s show did. The kids were told to find Conway and that they would win a trip to Sacramento with their mom if they succeeded.

"Now, are you guys ready to find Kellyanne Conway?" asked Mikey Day, who played the show's host.

"Well, we don't want to find her," one of the kids said, prompting laughter and applause from the audience.

Day then feigned confusion and said: "OK, well, that's our show. Seven weeks in a row and nobody wants to find that woman."

Conway was a frequent guest across cable news networks during President Donald Trump's campaign and in the early days of the Trump administration.

Later, however, Conway became engulfed in a string of controversies — she referred multiple times to a "massacre" in Kentucky that never happened and also coined the term "alternative facts" to refer to White House falsehoods, and her credibility was publicly questioned both by CNN and by MSNBC "Morning Joe" host Mika Brzezinski.

Following Conway's on-air blunders, there was a noticeable dip in Conway's TV appearances, and she has rarely appeared on news networks in recent days.